I thank all of you for bringing us to this moment. It
is great -- with great
humility and with great pride that we tonight will make for our country
and progress for the American people.

Just think, we will be joining those who established
Social Security, Medicare, and now tonight, health care for all Americans. In doing so, we will honor the vows of our
Founders,
who in the Declaration of Independence said that we are all -- that "we are all endowed by our
Creator certain unalienable Rights" and "among these are Life, Liberty and the
pursuit of Happiness."

This legislation will lead to healthier lives, more
liberty to pursue, hopes and dreams and happiness for the American people. This
is an American proposal that honors the traditions of our country.

We would not be here tonight for sure without the extraordinary leadership and
vision of President Barack Obama. We thank him for his unwavering commitment to
healthcare for all Americans. And this began over a year ago under his
leadership in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act where we had very
significant investments in science, technology, and innovation for health reform
-- healthcare
reform.

It continued in the President's budget a few months later, a budget
which was a statement of our national values, which allocated resources that
were part of our value system and in a way that stabilized our economy, created
jobs, lowered taxes for the middle class, and did so -- and reduced the deficit;
and did
so in a way that had pillars of investment including education and health care
reform. Health care and education equal opportunity for the American people. And this
-- And this legislation tonight, if I had one word to
describe it would be: "opportunity," with its investments in health care and
education as a continuation of the President's budget.

We all know, and it's been said over and over again, that our economy needs
something new -- a jolt. And I believe that this legislation will unleash
tremendous entrepreneurial power into our economy. Imagine a society and an
economy where a person could change jobs without losing health insurance; where
they could be self employed or start -- self-employed or start a small business.
Imagine an economy where
people could follow their passions and their talent without having to worry that
their children would not have health insurance -- that if they had a child with
diabetes, who was bipolar, or a pre-condition -- a pre-existing medical condition in their family,
that they would be job locked. Under this bill, their entrepreneurial spirit
will be unleashed.

We all know -- We all know that the present health care system and insurance
system -- health insurance system in our country is unsustainable. We simply cannot afford it.
It doesn't
work for enough people in terms of delivery of service, and it is bankrupting
the country with the upward spiral of increasing medical cost[s]. The best action
that we can take on behalf of America's family budgets and on behalf of the
federal budget is to pass health care reform.

The -- The best action we can take to strengthen Medicare and improve care and benefits
for our seniors is to pass this legislation tonight, pass health care reform.

The best action we can do to create jobs and strengthen our economic security is
pass health care reform.

The best action we can take to keep America competitive, ignite innovation
-- again,
unleash entrepreneurial spirit -- is to pass health care reform.

With this action tonight, with this health care reform, 32 million more
Americans will have health care insurance. And those who have insurance now will
be spared being at the mercy of the health insurance industry with their obscene
increases in premiums, their rescinding of policies at the time of illness,
their cutting off of policies even if you have -- have been fully paying but become sick.

The list goes on and on about the health care reforms that are in this
legislation.
In short: 32 million more people, make it more affordable for the middle class,
end insurance company discrimination on pre-existing conditions, improve care
and benefits under Medicare, and extending Medicare solvency for almost a
decade. Creating a healthier America through prevention , through wellness and
innovation, create 4 million jobs in the life of the bill, and doing all of that
by saving the taxpayer 1.3 trillion dollars.

Another -- Another Speaker,
Tip O'Neill, once said, "All politics is local." And I say to
you tonight, when it comes to health care for all Americans: All politics is
personal.

It's personal for the family that wrote to me who had to choose between buying
groceries and seeing a doctor. It's personal to the family who was refused
coverage because their child had a pre-existing condition -- no coverage the
child got worse, sicker. It's personal for women; after we pass this bill, being
a woman will no longer be a pre-existing medical condition.

It's personal for a senior gentleman I met in Michigan who told me about his
wife who had been bed ridden for 16 years. He told me he didn't know how he was
going to be able to pay his medical bills. As I said to you before, "I saw a grown
man cry." He was worried that he might lose his home -- that they might lose
their home because of his medical bills, and he didn't know how to pay them. And
most of all he was too embarrassed to tell his children and ask them for help.
How many times have you heard a story like that?

And it's personal for millions of families who have gone into bankruptcy under
the weight of rising health care cost[s].
In fact, many, many -- a high percentage of the bankruptcies in our country are caused by
medical bills that people cannot pay. And it's personal for 45,000 Americans and
their -- and -- and families who have lost a loved on each year because they
didn't and couldn't get
health insurance.

That is why we are proud and also humbled today to
act with the support of millions of Americans who recognize the urgency of
passing health care reform, and more than 350 organizations representing Americans of every age, every
background, every part of the country, who have endorsed this legislation. Our
coalition ranges from AARP,
who, quote, said that our legislation, quote "improves efforts to crack down on
fraud and waste in Medicare, strengthening" Medicare for today -- "today's
seniors and future generations." I repeat, "improves efforts to crack down on
fraud and waste in Medicare, strengthening the program for today's...and future
generations of seniors" -- to the American Medical Association, the Catholic
health Association, the United medical -- the United Methodist Church, and
Voices [for] America's
Children, from A to Z they are sending a clear message to members of Congress:
Say yes
to health care reform.

We have also reached this historic moment because of the leadership and
dedication of all the members of Congress, but I want to especially recognize
our esteemed Chairs, Mr. Waxman, Mr. Rangel, Mr. Levin, Mr. Miller, Mr. Spratt, Ms.
Slaughter, for bringing this bill to the floor today. Let us acknowledge them.

And
I want to acknowledge the staff of the committees and of the leadership -- they have
done a remarkable [job?], dazzling us with their knowledge and their know-how.

I would like to thank on my own staff, Amy
Rosenbaum, Wendell Primus, and Arshi Siddiqui

And now I want to just close by saying this: It wouldn't be possible to talk about
health care without acknowledging the great leadership of Senator Edward Kennedy,
who made health care his life's work.
In a letter to President Obama before he passed away -- he left a letter to be
read after he died -- Senator Kennedy wrote that
access to health care was the great unfinished business of our society.

That is,
until today.

After more [than] a year of debate -- and by the way the legislation that will go
forth from here has over 200 Republican amendments; and while it may not get
Republican votes and be bipartisan in that respect, it is bipartisan in having
over 200 Republican amendments. After a year of debate and hearing the calls of millions of Americans, we have
come to this historic moment. Today we have the opportunity to complete the
great unfinished business of our society and pass health insurance reform for
all Americans. That is a right and not a privilege.

In that same letter to the President, Senator Kennedy wrote what is at stake
-- he said -- "at stake are not
just the details of policy...but the character of our country." Americans will
look back on this day [as] one in which we honored the character of our country and
honored a commitment to our nation's Founders for a commitment to life, liberty,
and the pursuit of happiness.

As our colleague John Lewis has said, we may not have chosen the time, but the
time has chosen us.

We have been given this opportunity. I urge -- an
opportunity to stay right up there with, again, Social Security, Medicare,
health care for all Americans -- I urge my colleagues and
join together in passing health insurance reform -- making history, making
progress, and restoring the American dream. I urge an aye vote.